Chapter 12 – capacity management



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chapter 12a
KDF Resources GmbH

Aim: to introduce the type of calculations involved with capacity planning
This case illustrates some of the initial considerations when a company starts to look at plans for expanding capacity. Here the company has increasing demand that can only be met by increasing capacity. So it looks at the alternatives available – expansion on the existing site, or one, two or three new centres – and starts to compare these. The costs suggest a single large centre, but managers then have to consider a range of other factors, including the risks associated with mismatches between supply and demand. The book develops this type of approach into a formal procedure for capacity requirements planning.
GlaxoSmithKline

Aim: to illustrate the effects of economies of scale on growth in one industry
This case outlines the steps that one company has taken on its move from a small single company to become one of the world’s largest pharmaceutical company. The thinking behind this growth is that it is very expensive to develop new drugs, and research companies can get considerable economies of scale. A company can have organic growth, but this often gives an industry excess capacity. In this case it was felt better to grow by a series of mergers with similar companies. There are other examples of this, including retailers, banks, television companies, telephone operators, and car manufacturers.

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